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Expert Tells Value of Correctional Work
(Editor's Notf: Marcel Frym. J.D.. professor in the SC Schonl of Law and director of criminological research for the Hacker Foundation, recently addressed a New York meeting during a seminar on “Science vs. Crime." The following is a non-tec hnical summary of Professor Frym's criminology paper.)
After a lifetime of criminological and especially correctional work, Professor Frym has concluded that any deprivation of freedom—i.e.. any kind of institutionalization. even in the best type of detention facility—is harmful and actually operates against rehabilitation.
s than punishment through imprison-tremendously deterring effect on the
tea
itioi
metnoi have a fender aeaim
md can much more efficiently mobilize the commission of a crime, ify an offender, after clinical study and ex-5 seriously disturbed and in need of treatment :tional psychotherapy itself—may be much to the law-breaker than the traditional type
^hmen
This kind of procedure, which compels him to face his hidden, repressed fears and to look at his misdeeds self-critically, is a shocking experience and makes it impossible for him to blame society or others for his antisocial activities.
Our present system of criminal law enforcement fails to protect society from crime because: (1) Our methods of arrest and subsequent interrogation are aggressive far beyond their real needs and promote the offender's antagonism to law and authority; it is not true that efficient law enforcement requires the use of force, intimidation and humiliation, which are sad signs of inhumanity and usually indicative of poor and unscientific police work. (2) The fixing of sentence is, with very few exceptions, done in an “assembly-line" fashion, either by overburdened judges or. in jurisdictions which apply indeterminate sentences, by boards which are equally overburdened and are therefore unable to properly evaluate the individual offender.
Professor Frym feels that human beings who have
endangered the community by anti-social acts of some seriousness require complete management.
This means that necessary adjustment of the home and family situation, proper employment and psychotherapy are required if we want to do more than give lip service to the principle of rehabilitation of offenders.
Although Professor Frym, who himself is engaged in psychotherapeutic work, stresses the great importance of psychiatric help to the offender, he feels that proper employment—which means an adequate type of work holding some promise for the future—is most important.
He came to realize that there is no substitute for the reassuring effect of success and recognition through purposive efforts, which alone can reduce the basic fears which actually lie at the bottom of every type of delinquency.
He believes in separating correctional work as much as possible from governmental agencies; organized private agencies, dedicated to and equipped for the rehabilitation
of offenders, should preferably carry on correctional work, under the close and friendly supervision of probation and parole agencies.
The social integration of an endangered and therefore dangerous human being should be carried out by the community, which, in so doing, implicity proves its willingness to retain the offender as a member and to assist him in becoming a useful part of society.
The psychological implications of such an understanding and accepting attitude cannot be over-rated.
Professor Frym was appointed chairman of a specia. committee to study the daily-growing problem of employment and bonding of people with criminal records.
In accordance with reliable statistical figures, more than 10 million people here in the United States have serious ..criminal records which interfere with their employment and with bonding There is a growing trend in
(Continued on Page 4)
PAGE TV/O
Seniors Offered Dope On Formal Finales
Southern
I i-fornia
DAILY
TROJAN
PAGE FOUR
Music Group to Hear Beethoven Mass
VOL XLVIII
77
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 3, 1957
NO. 62
LECTURE SERIES
Dean Brings US Culture to India
Dean Tracv E. Strevev of the College of Letters. Arts,
and
of
Stiff Penalties Reduce Holiday Auto Fatalities
By I’nited Press A huge crackdown on drunken driving in Southern ('ali-
enees left Los Angeles last night bv plane for 1 a six weeks lecture tour for the U.S. Department »»* b>
He is a member of the National Historical Publi- forcement officers yesterday
Commission appointed a year ago by President "ith having kept the New
Famed Concert Artist To Appear Here Soon
DR. TRACY E. STREVEY
. . . International Lecturer
Group to Hear Talk on India
Dr. William 11. Wake, assistant professor of geography at SC. and his wife, Lucile, will speak 1o the Faculty Wives club at 2 p.m. on Jan. 9 in the foyer of Town and Gown.
Their subject will be “India— Problems and Progress.”
Hostesses Mrs. Erling H. Er-landson and Mrs. Chester Palmer will be assisted by Mmes. Elwood C. Da\ is. Earl L. Wallis. John M. Cooper, J. Tillman Hall. Robert M. Roesti. Milton F. Metfessel, Nicholas A. Bond.
ts E. Jones. Robert G. n. William Buchanan. Wii-\l. Whitby. Carman Bliss, Kalemkiarian. Robert W. jell. Earl M. Grotke. John cCov. Burton O. Kurth, i J. Siegel. Robert C. Da-and Robert A. Ellis.
. William R LaPorte will
Eisenhower.
Dr. Strevev will speak at universities throughout India, confer with groups of students and faculty members, and also lecture to international Kivvanis and Rotary clubs in the larger cities. He will go to Calcutta via Honolulu, Tokyo, and Hong 1 Kong by Pan American Airways. He will report to the U.S. Embassy in New Delhi where he will learn his schedule of lectures. Although he has traveled widely in Russia. Europe and Central America, this will be his first visit to India.
Speaks About U.S.
The educator will speak on the goals and philosophies of American highei education, the (organization of a university, faculty and student activities and organizations, American historical development, the evolution of our Federal system of government, and the growth of thp office of the President.
Other lectures will be given on great American leaders and statesmen such as Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt and Alexander Hamilton. Dr. Stre-vey will also speak on the impact of the Western frontier on American democracy.
Willamette Graduate
Dean Strevev was graduated ;
' from Willamette University. Sa- i lem. Ore.. in 1923 with a Bachelor ot Arts degree in history, and was given the honorary de- ; gree of Doctor of Laws there in 1951 when he was the commencement speaker
He is a member of the execu- , tive committee of the Western | College Association, formerly on the National Council on Higher Education, and a member of the American Historical Associa-; tion. Chicago Historical Society, Illinois Historical Society, Mississippi Valley Historical Association. Phi Delta Kappa, and Phi Delta Theta.
Year’s holiday traffie toll in
the area lower than the Christmas holiday toll.
Reports indicated that 13 persons lost their lives during the New Year holiday period in Southern California, 8‘J fewer than during the Christmas holiday.
Nine traffic deaths were re-|H>rted in I^os Angeles County, two were recorded in San Bernardino County and one each in Riverside and San Luis Obispo Counties.
Los Angeles Police said they arrested 150 persons on drunk driving charges and 1698 persons on plain drunk charges. There were 301 injuries in 579 accidents in the eitv.
Burby to Aid In Court Fight With Fallbrook
Professor William E. Burby of the School of Law has been appointed special assistant to U.S. j A 11 o r n e y-G e n e r a 1 Herbert Brownell to act as chief trial counsel for the Federal government's dispute with Fallbrook. Calif., water users over water rights on ihe Santa Margarita River.
Burby. whose appointment will last until the Fallbrook cases are j settled, is an authority on Cali-forrya water and real property law. He is the author of a textbook on real property and has | taught in the SC law school since 1927.
He will work directly under; Solicitor-General J. Lee Rankin 1 in handling the consolidated cases against the Fallbrook Public Utility District. Santa Margarita Mutual Water Co.. Pratt Mutual Water Co. and some 300 individual users in the Fallbrook area.
Art Sale Nets
$3000 to Aid
Refugee Fund
Ewing Oil Pointing Bought for $1 50
Some $3,000 dollars were raised for Hungarian student relief at an art auction Dec. IT and 18 at SC, it has been announced.
Sponsored by Kappa Pi, national honorary art fraternity, and the fine arts department student body at SC. the auction was one of a series of campus events held to raise funds for Hungarian refugee students.
The money has beer, sent to the Vienna office of World University Service where it will be used to aid escaped Hungarian students.
Francis de Erdely, Hungarian-born professor of painting at SC, was faculty advisor for the auction and also gave several drawings to be sold.
Other SC fine arts faculty members who donated work were Edgar Ewing. Merrell Gage, Jules Heller. Susan Peter-soi. and F. Carlton Ball.
Included among the outstanding Southland artists who gave work were Millard Sheets, Leonard Edmondson. Rico Lebrun, Roger Kuntz, Peter Voulkos, Paul Landacre and Vivika and Otto Heino. The fine arts faculty at The Associated Colleges, Claremont, gave more than 70 pieces.
Many private collectors attended the auction in addition to numerous students. Dr. Rufus B. von KIeinSmid, chancellor, purchased two Landacre woodcuts.
De Erdely's drawings brought , $400 and the highest single sale was an oil by Ewing at $150.
EMINENT CHOREOGRAPHER TO TEACH
University College to Offer Course Students Interested in Dancing
NIBBLE titi — diaties Weidman, wvideiy Known dance soicist end choreographer, demonstrates one of his own compositions. Weidman will teach a class in Dance Production on campus next semester on Thursday nights.
Charles Weidman. one of I America's foremost experts in j the field of concert dance, w ill conduct a University College class next semester at SC.
The class, entitled Dance Production. P.E. 324. will be worth | a minimum of two and a maximum of four units. Weidman ' will teach the class on Thursday nights from 7 to 9:40 in 207 PK, the dance studio. All members must sign up for the class with ' University College.
Prospective students should be interested in dancing and acting, hut need not be experienced dancers. Weidman will instruct his students in general techniques and the development of a special dance, to be given during the semester in Bovard Audi-' torium.
Concerts, Broadway Tn his capacity as a choreographer as well as soloist, the new’ SC professor has created more than 100 success! ill dancc works, for both the concert stage and Broadway shows. Because he believes that the i
dance should ‘‘amuse, entertain and astonish audiences as well as arouse them,” Weidman has combined serious themes and humorous treatment in his compositions.
Weidman opened his own school in New York in 1929 with another now-successful dancer, Doris Humphrey. He also started a concert group at that time, soon becoming well-known.
Since that time he has performed with the New York Philharmonic Symphony, the Philadelphia Orchestra and the Cleveland Symphony. He has staged dances for ‘‘Americana.” “As Thousands Cheer.” ‘‘I'd Rather Be Right.” and other successful Broadway productions.
Enters All Phases
As resident choreographer for the New York City Center Opera Ballets, Weidman has been active in all phases of dance in the American scene.
With the help of a Guggenheim fellowship awarded him in 1947, Weidman created his bal-(Continued on Page 4)
Final DT Set For Jan. 14
Final issue for this semester’s Daily Trojan will be published on .Monday, -Jan. 14, DT City Editor David C. Henley announced yesterday.
He added that the SC daily will resi'Hie after registration on Monday, Feb. 11.
RESEARCH
Brazil Offers
Post-Study Fellowships
Information is now available j for foreign studies in Brazil.
Ceylon and Israel. Applications I may be obtained by writing to I the Institute of International Education at 291 Geary Street, San Francisco 2. Calif.
The Uniao Cultural Brasil-I Estados Unios in Sao Paulo offers a fellowship for graduate study and research for the 1957 | academic year.
The fellowship is from Mar. i 1 to Dec. 15, 1957. Closing date | for competition is Jan. 23.
The candidate selected is required to teach English a minimum of six hours a week at the Uniao. Prerequisites are a bachelor’s degree from an American college or university of recognized standing hy the date of departure, good knowledge of Portuguese or a good knowledge of another romance language, good moral character, personality, adaptability and good health.
The opportunity to study a variety of subjects: sociology, economics, geography and history of Ceylon; Pali, the lan-1 guage of the early Buddhist | Scriptures, and Buddhist doctrines will be made possible with the offering of two fellowships to American graduate students for the academic year beginning June 1957 by the University of Ceylon. Peradeniya The above grants cover room, board and tuition. Grantees should have funds to pay their on travel and incidental* expenses. The closing date for applications is Jan. 15, 1957,
A research fellowship for the 1957-56 acadtm.c year has been offered by the Israeli government through its Ministry of Education. 1ms award is for a graduate student Who w ishes to engage in a research project. \ The closing date for applications is Feb. 28, 1957.
The grant is approximately $900 in American currency to cover maintenance and incidentals. Free tuition has been offered by the Hebrew' University in Jerusalem, the Hebrew Technical Institute in Haifa or the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovoth.
Fields of study preferred for the award are Regional Middle East or Israel Studies i sociology, history, language or related subjects.) Candidates for Jewish studies are required to know Hebrew. Other candidates are not required to know Hebrew, but teaching the three institu j tions is in Hebrew.
Szigeti to 11 Sonata
JOSEPH SZIGETI
. . Concert Violinist
Local Minister Set to Talk at Troy Sunday
Lutheran Pastor To Tell of Prayer
Sunday morning worship ser-| vices will be resumed in Bovard j Auditorium at 11 a.m, this Sun-: day.
| The Rev. Hubert K. Rasbach,
| pastor of' Hope Lutheran I Church in Holl>wood, will speak ! at the nondenominational service on “Is Prayer Begging?"
Carl Druba of the SC School of Music faculty wrll direct a student choir. Dr. Irene Robert-| son of the same faculty will be J the organist. Chaplain Clinton A.
Neyman of SC. who plans the weekly chapel program with Dr. j Albert S. Raubenheimer. educa-: tional vice president, will assist i in the services.
Although born in Tacoma.
! Wash., the Rev. Mr. Rasbach ;
! considers himself close to a native Californian, having lived here since he was six. He is a ; graduate of Franklin high school ; and Chapman College here, and received his Bachelor of Divinity degree from Capitol University Theological Seminary in Colum- I bus. Ohio.
He was ordamed in Los Ange- I Ies in Sept., 1940, and was installed as pastor of First Lutheran Church, Fullerton, the next I month. He accepted a call to Hope Lutheran Church on June i 1. 1947.
Since June. 1937, he has produced 14 motion pictures for the Lutheran Church, has been on j the board for the promotion of | audio-visuals in the American i Lutheran Church and is presently chairman of the script evaluation committee of the |
Broadcasting and Film Commis- ! sion of the National Council. He ; served as consultant for 20th j Century-Fox’s lfi mm. religious film experiment for several years and is motion picture editor for "ONE” magazine and the ‘‘Lutheran Standard.”
Other activities include a chairmanship on the Board for j
Christian Social Action of the | showing up in the driveway American Lutheran Church.’ leading to the President's office Homes For The Retired and the ]n increasing numbers. Recently Christian Approach to the Jew- one squirrel actually got inside ish People of the National the White House, but was Lutheran Council. 1 promptly shooed out.
Give
Cych
Joseph Szigeti, internationally famed violinist, will be presented in a cycle of three concerts devoted to ‘ Eleven Sonatas of the 20th Century” on Sunday, Wednesday, and Sunday evenings, January 6, 9, and 13 at 8:30 in Hancock
Auditorium.
All eleven sonatas were premiered by Szigeti during the past 30 years. This particular cycle was performed last summer throughout Europe and earlier this month in New York.
Making his Los Angeles debut with Szigeti is Carlo Bussotti, [ Italian pianist, who has appeared as soloist with leading orchestras of the worid and has made numerous recordings. Stravinsky The program for Jan. 6 will consist of Vaughan Williams’ Sonata in A minor. Sonata by Ernest Bloch. Stravinsky's Duo Concertant and the Sonata in E by Hindemith.
Three works are slated for Wednesday evening. They are the Sonata No. 2 by Busoni. Sonata by Debussy and the Sonata No. 2 by Bela Bartok. The Bartok piece was premiered by Szigeti with the composer at the piano in Budapest in the late 1920's.
Also programmed in the cycle are a sonata by Ravel. Sonata No. 4 by Charles E. Ives and the Prokofiff Sonata for Unaccompanied Violin.
Szigeti's musical career began when he was 17 through friendship with composer Ferrucio Busoni, whose second sonata is
White House Goes to Dogs
WASHINGTON (UP)—Backstairs at the White House:
All sorts of curious animal life is showing up around the White House these days.
Several weeks ago three big I cats were roaming the White House grounds. This week, to , the amazement of White House j police and staif members, two amon{r those to be played in tins apparently unattached dogs es- j series
tablished themselves inside the fenced south grounds of the executive mansici..
Cold weather apparently is sending the mice and rats from their normal burrows in the White House shrubbery toward the executive offices and buildings. Not long ago a courageous
1701 Violin
The viol'n that Szigeti will play was created in 1701 bv Petrus Guarnerius of Mantua and bears the handwritten label of its first owner, Count Bal-deschi.
Bussotti, who has been playing in recitals throughout the
herl of a White House policeman.
The once-banished White House squirrels have been
WORLD NEWS
Hungarian Reds Crush Near Riot
From United Press
BUDAPEST — Hungarian police and militia rammed trucks into a crowd of 2000 jeering Hungarians here yesterday to crush a flash demonstration against police strong-arm methods.
The demonstration broke out when police shoved and jostled a crowd of women in front of a state-run department store that opened its doors for the first time since the revolution today.
A group of men intervened
rat tried to take a nip in ihe world with Szigeti since 1950,
was born in Florence. Italy, He graduated at the age of 13 from the Luigi Cherubini Conservatory and made his debut the following year in Turin as the soloist with the Symphony Orchestra of Radio Italy.
SC students may purchase a three-night ticket for $5 or buy tickets for the separate performances at $2 ejich. Seats are >t reserved._
Veterans
Notice
Veterans attending school under Public Law 130 or Public Law 550 (Korean GI Rill) who fall Into one or more of the follow ing categories should contact the Office of > eteran \ffairs, basement of Commons. before Jan. 18.
Veterans planning to:
1. Receive a degree at the end of the current semester, on Jan. 30.
2. Change degree objective.
S. Change major.
4. Transfer to another Institution.
Elwyn E. Brooks Assistant Registrar
angrily on the side of the women shoppers. Police drew- their truncheons and slugged into the shouting crowd.
Powerful police reinforcements were called out and tiireatened to mow down the surging throng w'ith their powerful trucks.
The demonstrators were dis- j peised in le^s than a half hour | La an estimated 200 police ami I militiamen. No shots were fired, although Communist Police nervously pointed Soviet-made tom-(Continued on Page 4)

Expert Tells Value of Correctional Work
(Editor's Notf: Marcel Frym. J.D.. professor in the SC Schonl of Law and director of criminological research for the Hacker Foundation, recently addressed a New York meeting during a seminar on “Science vs. Crime." The following is a non-tec hnical summary of Professor Frym's criminology paper.)
After a lifetime of criminological and especially correctional work, Professor Frym has concluded that any deprivation of freedom—i.e.. any kind of institutionalization. even in the best type of detention facility—is harmful and actually operates against rehabilitation.
s than punishment through imprison-tremendously deterring effect on the
tea
itioi
metnoi have a fender aeaim
md can much more efficiently mobilize the commission of a crime, ify an offender, after clinical study and ex-5 seriously disturbed and in need of treatment :tional psychotherapy itself—may be much to the law-breaker than the traditional type
^hmen
This kind of procedure, which compels him to face his hidden, repressed fears and to look at his misdeeds self-critically, is a shocking experience and makes it impossible for him to blame society or others for his antisocial activities.
Our present system of criminal law enforcement fails to protect society from crime because: (1) Our methods of arrest and subsequent interrogation are aggressive far beyond their real needs and promote the offender's antagonism to law and authority; it is not true that efficient law enforcement requires the use of force, intimidation and humiliation, which are sad signs of inhumanity and usually indicative of poor and unscientific police work. (2) The fixing of sentence is, with very few exceptions, done in an “assembly-line" fashion, either by overburdened judges or. in jurisdictions which apply indeterminate sentences, by boards which are equally overburdened and are therefore unable to properly evaluate the individual offender.
Professor Frym feels that human beings who have
endangered the community by anti-social acts of some seriousness require complete management.
This means that necessary adjustment of the home and family situation, proper employment and psychotherapy are required if we want to do more than give lip service to the principle of rehabilitation of offenders.
Although Professor Frym, who himself is engaged in psychotherapeutic work, stresses the great importance of psychiatric help to the offender, he feels that proper employment—which means an adequate type of work holding some promise for the future—is most important.
He came to realize that there is no substitute for the reassuring effect of success and recognition through purposive efforts, which alone can reduce the basic fears which actually lie at the bottom of every type of delinquency.
He believes in separating correctional work as much as possible from governmental agencies; organized private agencies, dedicated to and equipped for the rehabilitation
of offenders, should preferably carry on correctional work, under the close and friendly supervision of probation and parole agencies.
The social integration of an endangered and therefore dangerous human being should be carried out by the community, which, in so doing, implicity proves its willingness to retain the offender as a member and to assist him in becoming a useful part of society.
The psychological implications of such an understanding and accepting attitude cannot be over-rated.
Professor Frym was appointed chairman of a specia. committee to study the daily-growing problem of employment and bonding of people with criminal records.
In accordance with reliable statistical figures, more than 10 million people here in the United States have serious ..criminal records which interfere with their employment and with bonding There is a growing trend in
(Continued on Page 4)
PAGE TV/O
Seniors Offered Dope On Formal Finales
Southern
I i-fornia
DAILY
TROJAN
PAGE FOUR
Music Group to Hear Beethoven Mass
VOL XLVIII
77
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 3, 1957
NO. 62
LECTURE SERIES
Dean Brings US Culture to India
Dean Tracv E. Strevev of the College of Letters. Arts,
and
of
Stiff Penalties Reduce Holiday Auto Fatalities
By I’nited Press A huge crackdown on drunken driving in Southern ('ali-
enees left Los Angeles last night bv plane for 1 a six weeks lecture tour for the U.S. Department »»* b>
He is a member of the National Historical Publi- forcement officers yesterday
Commission appointed a year ago by President "ith having kept the New
Famed Concert Artist To Appear Here Soon
DR. TRACY E. STREVEY
. . . International Lecturer
Group to Hear Talk on India
Dr. William 11. Wake, assistant professor of geography at SC. and his wife, Lucile, will speak 1o the Faculty Wives club at 2 p.m. on Jan. 9 in the foyer of Town and Gown.
Their subject will be “India— Problems and Progress.”
Hostesses Mrs. Erling H. Er-landson and Mrs. Chester Palmer will be assisted by Mmes. Elwood C. Da\ is. Earl L. Wallis. John M. Cooper, J. Tillman Hall. Robert M. Roesti. Milton F. Metfessel, Nicholas A. Bond.
ts E. Jones. Robert G. n. William Buchanan. Wii-\l. Whitby. Carman Bliss, Kalemkiarian. Robert W. jell. Earl M. Grotke. John cCov. Burton O. Kurth, i J. Siegel. Robert C. Da-and Robert A. Ellis.
. William R LaPorte will
Eisenhower.
Dr. Strevev will speak at universities throughout India, confer with groups of students and faculty members, and also lecture to international Kivvanis and Rotary clubs in the larger cities. He will go to Calcutta via Honolulu, Tokyo, and Hong 1 Kong by Pan American Airways. He will report to the U.S. Embassy in New Delhi where he will learn his schedule of lectures. Although he has traveled widely in Russia. Europe and Central America, this will be his first visit to India.
Speaks About U.S.
The educator will speak on the goals and philosophies of American highei education, the (organization of a university, faculty and student activities and organizations, American historical development, the evolution of our Federal system of government, and the growth of thp office of the President.
Other lectures will be given on great American leaders and statesmen such as Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt and Alexander Hamilton. Dr. Stre-vey will also speak on the impact of the Western frontier on American democracy.
Willamette Graduate
Dean Strevev was graduated ;
' from Willamette University. Sa- i lem. Ore.. in 1923 with a Bachelor ot Arts degree in history, and was given the honorary de- ; gree of Doctor of Laws there in 1951 when he was the commencement speaker
He is a member of the execu- , tive committee of the Western | College Association, formerly on the National Council on Higher Education, and a member of the American Historical Associa-; tion. Chicago Historical Society, Illinois Historical Society, Mississippi Valley Historical Association. Phi Delta Kappa, and Phi Delta Theta.
Year’s holiday traffie toll in
the area lower than the Christmas holiday toll.
Reports indicated that 13 persons lost their lives during the New Year holiday period in Southern California, 8‘J fewer than during the Christmas holiday.
Nine traffic deaths were re-|H>rted in I^os Angeles County, two were recorded in San Bernardino County and one each in Riverside and San Luis Obispo Counties.
Los Angeles Police said they arrested 150 persons on drunk driving charges and 1698 persons on plain drunk charges. There were 301 injuries in 579 accidents in the eitv.
Burby to Aid In Court Fight With Fallbrook
Professor William E. Burby of the School of Law has been appointed special assistant to U.S. j A 11 o r n e y-G e n e r a 1 Herbert Brownell to act as chief trial counsel for the Federal government's dispute with Fallbrook. Calif., water users over water rights on ihe Santa Margarita River.
Burby. whose appointment will last until the Fallbrook cases are j settled, is an authority on Cali-forrya water and real property law. He is the author of a textbook on real property and has | taught in the SC law school since 1927.
He will work directly under; Solicitor-General J. Lee Rankin 1 in handling the consolidated cases against the Fallbrook Public Utility District. Santa Margarita Mutual Water Co.. Pratt Mutual Water Co. and some 300 individual users in the Fallbrook area.
Art Sale Nets
$3000 to Aid
Refugee Fund
Ewing Oil Pointing Bought for $1 50
Some $3,000 dollars were raised for Hungarian student relief at an art auction Dec. IT and 18 at SC, it has been announced.
Sponsored by Kappa Pi, national honorary art fraternity, and the fine arts department student body at SC. the auction was one of a series of campus events held to raise funds for Hungarian refugee students.
The money has beer, sent to the Vienna office of World University Service where it will be used to aid escaped Hungarian students.
Francis de Erdely, Hungarian-born professor of painting at SC, was faculty advisor for the auction and also gave several drawings to be sold.
Other SC fine arts faculty members who donated work were Edgar Ewing. Merrell Gage, Jules Heller. Susan Peter-soi. and F. Carlton Ball.
Included among the outstanding Southland artists who gave work were Millard Sheets, Leonard Edmondson. Rico Lebrun, Roger Kuntz, Peter Voulkos, Paul Landacre and Vivika and Otto Heino. The fine arts faculty at The Associated Colleges, Claremont, gave more than 70 pieces.
Many private collectors attended the auction in addition to numerous students. Dr. Rufus B. von KIeinSmid, chancellor, purchased two Landacre woodcuts.
De Erdely's drawings brought , $400 and the highest single sale was an oil by Ewing at $150.
EMINENT CHOREOGRAPHER TO TEACH
University College to Offer Course Students Interested in Dancing
NIBBLE titi — diaties Weidman, wvideiy Known dance soicist end choreographer, demonstrates one of his own compositions. Weidman will teach a class in Dance Production on campus next semester on Thursday nights.
Charles Weidman. one of I America's foremost experts in j the field of concert dance, w ill conduct a University College class next semester at SC.
The class, entitled Dance Production. P.E. 324. will be worth | a minimum of two and a maximum of four units. Weidman ' will teach the class on Thursday nights from 7 to 9:40 in 207 PK, the dance studio. All members must sign up for the class with ' University College.
Prospective students should be interested in dancing and acting, hut need not be experienced dancers. Weidman will instruct his students in general techniques and the development of a special dance, to be given during the semester in Bovard Audi-' torium.
Concerts, Broadway Tn his capacity as a choreographer as well as soloist, the new’ SC professor has created more than 100 success! ill dancc works, for both the concert stage and Broadway shows. Because he believes that the i
dance should ‘‘amuse, entertain and astonish audiences as well as arouse them,” Weidman has combined serious themes and humorous treatment in his compositions.
Weidman opened his own school in New York in 1929 with another now-successful dancer, Doris Humphrey. He also started a concert group at that time, soon becoming well-known.
Since that time he has performed with the New York Philharmonic Symphony, the Philadelphia Orchestra and the Cleveland Symphony. He has staged dances for ‘‘Americana.” “As Thousands Cheer.” ‘‘I'd Rather Be Right.” and other successful Broadway productions.
Enters All Phases
As resident choreographer for the New York City Center Opera Ballets, Weidman has been active in all phases of dance in the American scene.
With the help of a Guggenheim fellowship awarded him in 1947, Weidman created his bal-(Continued on Page 4)
Final DT Set For Jan. 14
Final issue for this semester’s Daily Trojan will be published on .Monday, -Jan. 14, DT City Editor David C. Henley announced yesterday.
He added that the SC daily will resi'Hie after registration on Monday, Feb. 11.
RESEARCH
Brazil Offers
Post-Study Fellowships
Information is now available j for foreign studies in Brazil.
Ceylon and Israel. Applications I may be obtained by writing to I the Institute of International Education at 291 Geary Street, San Francisco 2. Calif.
The Uniao Cultural Brasil-I Estados Unios in Sao Paulo offers a fellowship for graduate study and research for the 1957 | academic year.
The fellowship is from Mar. i 1 to Dec. 15, 1957. Closing date | for competition is Jan. 23.
The candidate selected is required to teach English a minimum of six hours a week at the Uniao. Prerequisites are a bachelor’s degree from an American college or university of recognized standing hy the date of departure, good knowledge of Portuguese or a good knowledge of another romance language, good moral character, personality, adaptability and good health.
The opportunity to study a variety of subjects: sociology, economics, geography and history of Ceylon; Pali, the lan-1 guage of the early Buddhist | Scriptures, and Buddhist doctrines will be made possible with the offering of two fellowships to American graduate students for the academic year beginning June 1957 by the University of Ceylon. Peradeniya The above grants cover room, board and tuition. Grantees should have funds to pay their on travel and incidental* expenses. The closing date for applications is Jan. 15, 1957,
A research fellowship for the 1957-56 acadtm.c year has been offered by the Israeli government through its Ministry of Education. 1ms award is for a graduate student Who w ishes to engage in a research project. \ The closing date for applications is Feb. 28, 1957.
The grant is approximately $900 in American currency to cover maintenance and incidentals. Free tuition has been offered by the Hebrew' University in Jerusalem, the Hebrew Technical Institute in Haifa or the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovoth.
Fields of study preferred for the award are Regional Middle East or Israel Studies i sociology, history, language or related subjects.) Candidates for Jewish studies are required to know Hebrew. Other candidates are not required to know Hebrew, but teaching the three institu j tions is in Hebrew.
Szigeti to 11 Sonata
JOSEPH SZIGETI
. . Concert Violinist
Local Minister Set to Talk at Troy Sunday
Lutheran Pastor To Tell of Prayer
Sunday morning worship ser-| vices will be resumed in Bovard j Auditorium at 11 a.m, this Sun-: day.
| The Rev. Hubert K. Rasbach,
| pastor of' Hope Lutheran I Church in Holl>wood, will speak ! at the nondenominational service on “Is Prayer Begging?"
Carl Druba of the SC School of Music faculty wrll direct a student choir. Dr. Irene Robert-| son of the same faculty will be J the organist. Chaplain Clinton A.
Neyman of SC. who plans the weekly chapel program with Dr. j Albert S. Raubenheimer. educa-: tional vice president, will assist i in the services.
Although born in Tacoma.
! Wash., the Rev. Mr. Rasbach ;
! considers himself close to a native Californian, having lived here since he was six. He is a ; graduate of Franklin high school ; and Chapman College here, and received his Bachelor of Divinity degree from Capitol University Theological Seminary in Colum- I bus. Ohio.
He was ordamed in Los Ange- I Ies in Sept., 1940, and was installed as pastor of First Lutheran Church, Fullerton, the next I month. He accepted a call to Hope Lutheran Church on June i 1. 1947.
Since June. 1937, he has produced 14 motion pictures for the Lutheran Church, has been on j the board for the promotion of | audio-visuals in the American i Lutheran Church and is presently chairman of the script evaluation committee of the |
Broadcasting and Film Commis- ! sion of the National Council. He ; served as consultant for 20th j Century-Fox’s lfi mm. religious film experiment for several years and is motion picture editor for "ONE” magazine and the ‘‘Lutheran Standard.”
Other activities include a chairmanship on the Board for j
Christian Social Action of the | showing up in the driveway American Lutheran Church.’ leading to the President's office Homes For The Retired and the ]n increasing numbers. Recently Christian Approach to the Jew- one squirrel actually got inside ish People of the National the White House, but was Lutheran Council. 1 promptly shooed out.
Give
Cych
Joseph Szigeti, internationally famed violinist, will be presented in a cycle of three concerts devoted to ‘ Eleven Sonatas of the 20th Century” on Sunday, Wednesday, and Sunday evenings, January 6, 9, and 13 at 8:30 in Hancock
Auditorium.
All eleven sonatas were premiered by Szigeti during the past 30 years. This particular cycle was performed last summer throughout Europe and earlier this month in New York.
Making his Los Angeles debut with Szigeti is Carlo Bussotti, [ Italian pianist, who has appeared as soloist with leading orchestras of the worid and has made numerous recordings. Stravinsky The program for Jan. 6 will consist of Vaughan Williams’ Sonata in A minor. Sonata by Ernest Bloch. Stravinsky's Duo Concertant and the Sonata in E by Hindemith.
Three works are slated for Wednesday evening. They are the Sonata No. 2 by Busoni. Sonata by Debussy and the Sonata No. 2 by Bela Bartok. The Bartok piece was premiered by Szigeti with the composer at the piano in Budapest in the late 1920's.
Also programmed in the cycle are a sonata by Ravel. Sonata No. 4 by Charles E. Ives and the Prokofiff Sonata for Unaccompanied Violin.
Szigeti's musical career began when he was 17 through friendship with composer Ferrucio Busoni, whose second sonata is
White House Goes to Dogs
WASHINGTON (UP)—Backstairs at the White House:
All sorts of curious animal life is showing up around the White House these days.
Several weeks ago three big I cats were roaming the White House grounds. This week, to , the amazement of White House j police and staif members, two amon{r those to be played in tins apparently unattached dogs es- j series
tablished themselves inside the fenced south grounds of the executive mansici..
Cold weather apparently is sending the mice and rats from their normal burrows in the White House shrubbery toward the executive offices and buildings. Not long ago a courageous
1701 Violin
The viol'n that Szigeti will play was created in 1701 bv Petrus Guarnerius of Mantua and bears the handwritten label of its first owner, Count Bal-deschi.
Bussotti, who has been playing in recitals throughout the
herl of a White House policeman.
The once-banished White House squirrels have been
WORLD NEWS
Hungarian Reds Crush Near Riot
From United Press
BUDAPEST — Hungarian police and militia rammed trucks into a crowd of 2000 jeering Hungarians here yesterday to crush a flash demonstration against police strong-arm methods.
The demonstration broke out when police shoved and jostled a crowd of women in front of a state-run department store that opened its doors for the first time since the revolution today.
A group of men intervened
rat tried to take a nip in ihe world with Szigeti since 1950,
was born in Florence. Italy, He graduated at the age of 13 from the Luigi Cherubini Conservatory and made his debut the following year in Turin as the soloist with the Symphony Orchestra of Radio Italy.
SC students may purchase a three-night ticket for $5 or buy tickets for the separate performances at $2 ejich. Seats are >t reserved._
Veterans
Notice
Veterans attending school under Public Law 130 or Public Law 550 (Korean GI Rill) who fall Into one or more of the follow ing categories should contact the Office of > eteran \ffairs, basement of Commons. before Jan. 18.
Veterans planning to:
1. Receive a degree at the end of the current semester, on Jan. 30.
2. Change degree objective.
S. Change major.
4. Transfer to another Institution.
Elwyn E. Brooks Assistant Registrar
angrily on the side of the women shoppers. Police drew- their truncheons and slugged into the shouting crowd.
Powerful police reinforcements were called out and tiireatened to mow down the surging throng w'ith their powerful trucks.
The demonstrators were dis- j peised in le^s than a half hour | La an estimated 200 police ami I militiamen. No shots were fired, although Communist Police nervously pointed Soviet-made tom-(Continued on Page 4)